The next morning I cooked up a bowl of oatmeal on the Colemann stove and ate on the shore of Blackhawk lake as the sun rose over the horizon. Leaving the windows cracked open the night before had resulted in a damp blanket of condensation throughout the interior of the VW. I rolled the windows down and went for a walk along the main park road while it dried out for a while. Tall trees lined the road while within the park but as soon as I walked beyond the boundary I was engulfed in sun and corn. I strolled along the shoulder of the road for a while captivated by the lush greens of the land on this muggy June morning.
There is something soothing to me about the upper Midwest. I know nothing about farming. I didn't grow up here, or even in a rural area for that matter, having been raised in the endless sprawl of suburbs north of Dallas, Texas. However, from the first time I came, it has just felt right. That probably sounds a bit ridiculous, it even did to me at first, because for several years I had been researching and fantasizing about traveling the real American West. Heck, I already lived in one of the most scenic places of New England, at the doorstep of New Hampshire's White Mountains, which to me seemed like just a less intense version of what was waiting for me out there. You know, towering mountain ranges, barely penetrable desert canyons, unspoiled wilderness, the stuff of adventure. And here I was beginning to feel at ease in the Corn Belt. There was no way. I had to get moving again and put Iowa, the corn, the soy, the barns, and the rest of the Midwest behind me.
I walked back to the campground, repacked my things, fired up the VW's engine, and resumed my westward trajectory. I followed the well-marked old alignments of the Lincoln Highway as they roughly paralleled US-30. While traveling on the unpaved gravel sections of this historic route, it was easy to imagine slowly rattling toward the horizon for days along this same road in a worn Ford Model T. I followed the old route into Marshalltown, Iowa and quickly wished I hadn't, since I missed a turn and became temporarily lost in the middle of the city. Though not a big city by any means, after all the tiny towns I had been accustomed to passing through thus far, it felt downright chaotic. I knew that US-30 ran south of town so I followed the streets in that general direction and after some backtracking from dead ends, I was on Highway 30 making my way toward Nebraska.
Nebraska was an unexpected surprise. I never thought about meandering around Nebraska. For most, it's one of those places you go through, quickly. Maybe make a hurried stop along I-80 at a travel plaza or a McDonalds, but definitely get across as soon as possible to get to the good stuff beyond. I had zero expectations of the state but maybe that's why I found it so fascinating.
The first night in Nebraska I camped at Victoria Springs near Anselmo. I went for a walk down the road after dinner. At a rise in the road I turned around to head back to the campground. As the sun was getting low, a bank of dark clouds was forming on the western horizon. The clouds were getting larger and darker as I neared the campground. Back at the VW, I looked overhead and there was a distinct dark arc rolling across the whole sky above, beyond which was pitch black. This was going to get interesting.
All of a sudden the breeze stopped dead still. Not a leaf moved. Then I could almost feel the storm breathing in a huge gulp in preparation for what it was about to unleash. Having been though tons of severe weather back in Texas I knew that updraft meant the fury was immanent. I quick got in the car as huge drops began pelting the earth. Shortly after the wind picked up strong and the temperature plummeted what felt like 25 degrees in an instant. I got into my sleeping bag and looked up through the back window at the trees above tossing in the wind. The driving rain transitioned into hail as lightning bolts momentarily illuminated the campground like daylight. The hail covered the grass in a matter of minutes and from inside the VW it was about like being stuck in a metal drum while it was pounded by a thousand hammers. The hail soon subsided, the rain gradually tapered down, and I drifted off to sleep
What remains of a 1941 Ford at the edge of a cornfield in Iowa.
The VW on an original stretch of the Lincoln Highway. Iowa.
Entering the Nebraska Sandhills on some random ranch road.
Getting lost following random roads in the Sandhill Region.
Huge cottonwoods at the Victoria Springs campground. That little cabin was built by the first settler in the area I believe.